PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS OF HOVERING AND CRUISING PERFORMANCE FOR THE TRIDENT VTOL AIRCRAFT CONCEPT,

Abstract

The Trident is a hypothetical tail-sitter VTOL aircraft, with a tip-jet-driven three-bladed rigid rotor, which becomes a Trident wing with tip propulsion jets upon transition to cruising flight. A simplified system of equations for hovering and cruising performance is presented and applied to obtain performance estimates for a family of nine configurations, differing in rotor planform geometry. Results presented are confined to the cold-jet case, and to the operating mode, wherein the rotor is locked into a fixed-wing configuration during crusing flight. The results indicate that thhe T1rident concept may afford a comparatively good compromise between the competing requirements for hovering performance and cruising efficiency, despite rather severe performance penalties associated with the restricted space available for air ducts within the rotor blades. Final conclusions on the merits of the Trident concept are deferred, pending development of information on transition-flight stability and control, and rotor weight and structural integrity. (Author)

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 01, 1963
Accession Number
AD0421002

Entities

People

  • Arnold W. Anderson
  • Harvey R. Chaplin

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Air Platforms

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Aircrafts
  • Efficiency
  • Equations
  • Flight
  • Geometry
  • Hovering
  • Mathematics
  • Planform
  • Structural Integrity
  • Transition Flight
  • Transitions

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Aerospace Engineering
  • Systems Analysis and Design

Technology Areas

  • Space
  • Space - Spacecraft Maneuvers